Jack Pivac wrote:
on 10/03/06 13:56 Lachlan Hunt said the following:
I have a page with about 20-30 div's each about 200-300px height.
With that many, you may be overusing/abusing the div element. [...]
You should probably try and find more semantic elements.
So in this case
on 10/03/06 21:46 Lachlan Hunt said the following:
In that case, the div class=office look acceptable, the rest don't.
Although besides the divs, there are some other things I'd be more
concerned about.
yes that is terribly sloppy, I agree 100%. still very much a work in
progress. Copying
Look up page-break-before and page-break-after in google for
explanations and how to use in your particular case.
Joseph R. B. Taylor
Sites by Joe, LLC
http://sitesbyjoe.com
(609)335-3076
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jack Pivac wrote:
I have a page with about 20-30 div's each about 200-300px height.
Jack Pivac wrote:
I have a page with about 20-30 div's each about 200-300px height.
With that many, you may be overusing/abusing the div element. It's a
common mistake, often referred to as div-mania (or something along
those lines). You should probably try and find more semantic elements.
common mistake, often referred to as div-mania (or something along
It's famous!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divitis
**
The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/
See http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
for some
on 10/03/06 13:56 Lachlan Hunt said the following:
I have a page with about 20-30 div's each about 200-300px height.
With that many, you may be overusing/abusing the div element. It's a
common mistake, often referred to as div-mania (or something along
those lines). You should probably
I would think this is legitimate and semantic use of multiple div's
anyone for bending the page-break-X rules a little??
At 01:57 PM 10/03/2006, Jack Pivac wrote:
on 10/03/06 13:56 Lachlan Hunt said the following:
I have a page with about 20-30 div's each about 200-300px height.
With that